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Every new command is wrapped in a tweet and posted
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there are Twitter accounts for commands that get a minimum of 3 and 10 votes - that way only the great commands get tweeted.

A potential source of a full filesystem are large files left open but have been deleted. On Linux, a file may be deleted (removed/unlinked) while a process has it open. When this happens, the file is essentially invisible to other processes, but it still takes on physical space on the drive. Tools like du will not see it.

Don't want to open up an editor just to view a bunch of XML files in an easy to read format? Now you can do it from the comfort of your own command line! :-) This creates a new function, xmlpager, which shows an XML file in its entirety, but with the actual content (non-tag text) highlighted. It does this by setting the foreground to color #4 (red) after every tag and resets it before the next tag. (Hint: try `tput bold` as an alternative). I use 'xmlindent' to neatly reflow and indent the text, but, of course, that's optional. If you don't have xmlindent, just replace it with 'cat'. Additionally, this example shows piping into the optional 'less' pager; note the -r option which allows raw escape codes to be passed to the terminal.

I copied this (let's be honest) somewhere on internet and I just made it as a function ready to be used as alias. It shows the 10 most used commands from history. This seems to be just another "most used commands from history", but hey.. this is a function!!! :D

Working with lists of IP addresses it is sometimes useful to summarize a count of how many times an IP address appears in the file.

This example, summarizeIP, uses another function "verifyIP" previously defined in commandlinefu.com to ensure only valid IP addresses get counted. The summary list is presented in count order starting with highest count.